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Stamford’s Board of Education has reached national notoriety this week on the internet, television, and social media platforms. They have a dilemma—a vote was taken to remove two federal holidays from the school calendars for 2024-25 and 2025-26. Now both Columbus and Veterans Day have been removed.
Here is the scuttlebutt:
Despite the national uproar this district has created, federal and state law covers freedom of speech, and the reason one Board of Education member continues to speak out for the community.
First, in Bond v. Floyd 385 U.S. 116, the United States Supreme Court clearly stated the following:
“The First Amendment in a representative government requires that legislators be given the widest latitude to express their views on issues of policy … debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open. Legislators have an obligation to take positions on controversial political questions so that their constituents can be fully informed by them and be better able to assess their qualifications for office; also, so they may be represented in governmental debates by the person they have elected to represent them”.
That would seem to answer the question, however in 2022, the Supreme Court decided Houston Community College System v. Wilson. In that case, the court referenced the Bond v. Floyd case. In the Houston case, Mr. Wilson was elected to the Board of Trustees of the Houston Community College System. Mr. Wilson often disagreed with the board about the best interests of the College. The disagreements escalated to the point where the board publicly censured him. The censure stated, “his conduct was not consistent with the best interest of the College.” He claimed violation of free speech protected by the First Amendment.
The court concluded the censure did not violate his free speech. The court drew a distinction with the Bond case. It cautioned it was a very narrow distinction. It said, “This case is a narrow one. It involves a censure of one member of an elected body by other members of the same body. It does not involve expulsion, exclusion, or any other form of punishment. It entails only a First Amendment retaliation claim, not any other claim or any other source of law. The board’s censure spoke to the conduct of official business, and it was issued by individuals seeking to discharge their public duties.” The court also explained the long-standing history and right of an elected body to discipline its members.
Second, once the Stamford Board of Education adopts a policy, can the argument be made “seeking to discharge their public duties” by enforcing Policy 9005? Clearly before a policy is adopted, no one can stop a member of the Board of Education from speaking for or against it in the public forum. This is consistent with Connecticut General Statute Section 52-196a that states any civil action brought against someone for exercising communication or conduct furthering communication, in a public forum on a matter of public concern, the court should dismiss the complaint. This would strongly suggest it is the public policy of the State of Connecticut you cannot stop anyone (elected or otherwise) from speaking out on matters of public concern.
Here is the Stamford Board of Education Policy 9005—Statement of Integrity (2014), that one of the dissenting members is being threatened with censorship:
The long term health of a representative democracy requires that citizenship and leadership act upon what is right, rather than what is popular. As Board of Education members, our goal is to improve the education of our children and to advocate for them and their best interests. Board members must be working effectively together and with others in the community to successfully reach this goal.
A Board of Education that operates with integrity will be a more effective board. Integrity is first, discerning what is right and what is wrong, second, acting upon what you have discerned even at personal cost; and third, saying openly that you are acting on your understanding of right from wrong. It requires that students, colleagues, constituents, and others in the community be considered in every decision. A Board of Education with a sense of integrity will consider what is right, and what is wrong. This takes discipline and an awareness of one’s environment.
To this end, as a Board of Education with integrity, we will:
Using both law and policy, decision-making bodies like the Stamford Board of Education, should allow elected officials latitude. This Board of Education has clearly displayed nationally it no longer listens to the community-at-large and has created a biased, partisan bowl of spaghetti.
Outside of the debate floor, the Stamford Board of Education president wields her power when appropriate for partisanship. Case-in-point, seven members attended the CABE (Connecticut Association of Boards of Education) Fall conference this year. One member, a Republican, was not invited to participate with the team of six Democrats at lunch. So, this member found a seat at another table.
Feeling guilty, one of the six Board of Education members found the Republican out of approximately 500 attendees and said there was a seat available after all. Odd that the Board of Education president, or her team of Democrats, would not even consider asking the seventh Board of Education member to join them for lunch that day. Unfortunately, this is how collaboration works on the Stamford Board of Education. If anyone disagrees with individuals in power or is vocal about it, they believe they can censure or bully them.
Lately this seems to be how this partisan group works in this current polarized environment when making decisions around school calendars, districtwide surveys or listening to the community of stakeholders—just censure individuals when they disagree with you. It is easy to do and a great way to put them in their place, so they think. Sadly, this is democracy at its finest in Stamford, Connecticut! Hopefully there will be a second chance to reconsider the calendar vote… censuring doesn’t work for anyone or any group when the policies and processes are set up to fail. Stamford Board of Education, please help make Stamford proud!
Dr. Rebecca Hamman currently serves as the Ad Hoc Policy Chair for the Stamford Board of Education. Her comments are her own, and do not represent the official views of the Board of Education or its committees.